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Dan Muys returned to Ottawa in redrawn Flamborough—Glanbrook—Brant North riding

Dan Muys returned to Ottawa in redrawn Flamborough—Glanbrook—Brant North riding

Rejigged riding boundary, new federal election, different opponents.
Same winner.
Conservative Dan Muys, a first-time incumbent but active in electoral politics for 30 years, won the sprawling, sparsely populated Flamborough—Glanbrook—Brant North riding in Monday's federal election.
The 54-year-old was raised in Copetown, lives in Lynden, and has worked in the agri-food and energy sectors, according to a campaign website.
The redrawn riding is largely rural, and the issue of how to help farmers weather the Trump tariff war was among those raised during the Cable 14 live TV debate in Hamilton.
Liberal candidate Chuck Phillips called for preserving local farmland in the face of urban growth, increasing processing facilities for farm products, and helping farmers trade their products east and west, given new barriers to U.S. trade.
Muys did not weigh in on the issue — he did not attend the debate, citing a
previous commitment.
His absence drew jabs from Phillips and NDP candidate Peter Werhun, in the otherwise genial discussion.
Muys handily won the former Flamborough-Glanbrook riding in the 2021 election. He had previously been chief of staff to former Conservative MP David Sweet.
In the last parliament, Muys served on the standing committee on transport, infrastructure and communities.
The new Flamborough-Glanbrook-Brant North riding is largely rural, and if signs are any indication, incumbent Conservative candidate Dan Muys has considerable support in the wilds of West Flamborough, where this photo was taken on election day. Muys' signs were the only ones visible driving along Hwy. 8. Rival candidates vying for the riding include Liberal Chuck Phillips and the NDP's Peter Werhun.
In 1993, he was 22 and living in Copetown, when he served as a youth delegate for Jean Charest during the Conservative leadership convention in Ottawa that selected Kim Campbell, making her prime minister for 132 days.
Seven years later, he was campaign manager for Priscilla de Villiers, one of the provincial PCs running in a byelection in the former Wentworth-Burlington riding.
In the wake of the boundary change, Flamborough—Glanbrook—Brant North
covers 1,097 square kilometres with just 87,052 eligible voters. By comparison, the adjacent Hamilton West—Ancaster—Dundas riding is 1,000 square kilometres smaller but has 94,019 electors.
Communities north of Brantford and south of Cambridge now part of the riding include Paris, St. George and Glen Morris.

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